On 8/27/20 4:06 PM, NFN Smith wrote:
WaltS48 wrote:
On 8/27/20 6:35 AM, Don Spam's Reckless Son wrote:



But it is happening that there's at least a few sites out there that may start having problems with Seamonkey.  For that, you don't have to abandon Seamonkey, but it may be useful to have an alternate browser for getting to sites that may have issues (whether real, or just annoying sites that don't want to deal with it) with Seamonkey.

Smith

The problem is usually - as in this case - that a site has javascript identifying the various browsers and catering for them individually. Not a particularly good idea in the first place and it tends to fail when confronted with a browser it does not recognise.

I this case it seems to be where they're explicitly rejecting anything that's not on their internal whitelist.

I saw a posting in this forum (I think) around a year ago where someone posted a link to Google's suggestions for resolving the problem - the javascript should test for browser *capabilities* instead of browser/level combinations, examples were provided on the Google-page. Unfortunately Google themselves don't follow that advice, some of their pages are/were broken for Seamonkey.
Edward's suggestion should help, although it requires 2.53.3 or higher.

Depending on the site, it could be *Feature* detection or browser sniffing.

<https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Learn/Tools_and_testing/Cross_browser_testing/Feature_detection>

From the testing I did, it looks like their scripting is explicitly querying browser capabilities, rather than simply looking at what's presented in the User Agent string.

Technically, that's the correct thing to be doing, even if Google isn't following their own advice, at least not strictly.

In the case of a movie site like Rotten Tomatoes, I'm assuming that there's a lot of direct connection to content and delivery mechanisms related to YouTube, so it makes sense that they're going to demand use of a browser that supports YouTube's current capacities, and that they enforce that demand based on data that they extract through querying the contents of the browser.

For what it's worth, I did check that site with other browsers, including Firefox 80, legacy Edge, PaleMoon, Safari and Opera.  I had no problems with any of those browsers except Edge. I don't yet have the new Chrome version of Edge and PaleMoon, but if Safari and Opera are OK, then it seems to be that any current Chromium browser is OK, rather than Google Chrome, as the site demands.  And for Firefox 80, it does look like they've implemented something that uses the current Google offerings.  I don't have a copy of Firefox 68.x ESR handy, so I don't know if that will handle this situation, but with the 68 branch nearly EOL, it probably doesn't much matter.

Smith


I feel bad for Linux users that want to use HBO Max.

<https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2020/08/hbo-max-cranks-up-the-widevine-drm-leaves-linux-users-in-the-cold/>

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